Trust Not in Bibi
I was much too easy on Bibi when he came to the US to speak
to the joint session of Congress. Maybe
I was just trying to be a good host.
Anyway, my main beef at the time was with the Republicans, who were
interfering improperly with Israeli domestic politics. I never thought anything Netanyahu was going
to say was going to affect the outcome of the negotiations with Iran—certainly
not with regard to President Obama’s stance, even less for the other
participants (Iran, France, Britain, Germany, Russia, China, and the European
Union). And in fact it did not; maybe
the pressure succeeded in moving the end of the agreement from 10 years to 15
years--that's all fantasyland, anyway; by 2030 many things are
likely to have changed, in Iran, in the global nuclear proliferation framework,
maybe even in Israel. One can hope.
I do want to point out that Netanyahu’s last minute
demagoguery in the Israeli campaign showed his true colors. I have said it before: When Netanyahu complained that the required
negotiation partners were lacking for an Israeli-Palestinian agreement, it was
true. He was unsuitable, and remains
so. I will give him credit: his despicable, racist threats in the last
minutes of the campaign succeeded in gaining him that little nudge he needed to
be sure that it was to him that the Israeli President turned, as the head of
the party with a clear lead in the number of Knesset seats. Those 2-3 seats were basically gained at the
expense of the far-right parties; however, for them it was perhaps an
acceptable deal (maybe not for the 2-3 candidates who didn’t get seated). With Netanyahu in control of the new government's coalition-building, those parties
will be included in the final coalition
(at least most of them will be), while they probably would not have been
invited in if the Livni/Herzog Zionist Front had ended up in the driver’s seat. In that case it would probably have ended up
being a coalition of the parties across
the center-left and center-right, which would have included Netanyahu’s Likud
(needed to get the numbers), but in a lesser role.
I see the Atlantic’s Jeffrey Goldberg has been suckered into echoing Netanyahu's line with regard to the anti-Semitic slant of some of the recent terroristic events in Europe in
recent days. As has often occurred in
the past, his editors put a shock headline (“Is It Time for the Jews to Leave Europe“)
on his more reasoned discussion, but I would suggest that, just as Netanyahu
argues for more Jews in Israel for his narrow political objectives (countering
the demographic decline in the percentage of first-generation Jewish
immigrants, usually more likely to support his side), Europeans could counter that Israelis would do better to move to Europe and help balance the growth in Islamist numbers.
From the security point of view, I’m not sure Israel has the edge,
either: Western European governments are now highly sensitized toward protection of their Jewish minorities, and security has
been stepped up noticeably.
Final comment: I hope
the Israeli Arab alliance is not discouraged by the outcome of the Israeli elections. What was clear from Netanyahu’s conquering
stoop is that, united, the Israeli Arabs are a political force to be
regarded—though not yet to be considered in forming governments. If/when Netanyahu’s last term (surely) fails,
the next round may favor a more forthright stance toward negotiation (if the
failure is not in the form of massive violence, an intifada 3.0) and a switch
in economic policy to the left. That
will be the time when the Israeli Arabs can make their growing presence felt
and help bring about some sort of final agreement in Palestine. Clearly, nothing will happen until then.
Give Peace a Chance
With regard to the draft agreement on nuclear power with
Iran: The world should rejoice, at least
for a couple of days until the professional nitpickers start finding flaws. Certainly, there will be some blemishes, and
I would be underrating the Iranians' subtlety and watchful attention to the West were I to suggest that
they will not exploit them. . They should then thank the paid negativistic natterers (thanks for the
alliteration, Spiro Agnew speechwriter!) for pointing them out. I
think most of the nations involved will be earnest and sincere in following
through on the terms of the agreement, while I would expect the Iranians to observe the letter
of it, while pressing to relieve the sanctions sooner than the terms--yet to be finalized--will specify.
There will be a debate in the US Congress about relieving
the sanctions, whenever that is supposed to happen, and I would not suppose the
outcome will be favorable. The point
that should be clearly understood up front, however, is that refusing
unilaterally to relieve them will be a pointless political charade: if the rest of the world is not observing the
sanctions, the US’ insistence on maintaining them will be relatively inconsequential
(except to be a major pain in the ass for those institutions required to
observe US law). It’s something to make
hardliners feel good when they have nothing to feel good about.
Instead, the Congressional critics of the prospects of a peaceful resolution should look at the deal as a win-win opportunity for them: if Iran fails to live up to its agreement, or even if their compliance is dodgy, Saddam Hussein-style, there would be a legitimate basis for punitive action. Though the agreement is limited in its scope, the negotiations' progress also presents a political opportunity for a big victory in the region, if it strengthens the hand of the wing more open to reforms, currently headed by Iran's elected President Rouhani. That can only happen if the US acts in good faith with its allies, negotiating partners, and respects its promises to Iran. I don't expect such good sense, though, expecting instead the reflexive opposition to anything originated by the Obama Administration.
Campaign 2016: Act I, Scene 2
Although I have remained pretty strict in my observance of
my “no new political contributions in 2015” rule—trying to do my little part to
reduce the PAC arms race while I can—I cannot remain totally silent about the
2016 campaign, which is starting to impose itself. I am in the “Almost Ready for Hillary” camp,
where I expect to remain for the rest of the year. I am not in favor of a serious challenge to
her candidacy on the Democratic side.
Maybe a silly one, like ex-Governor O’Malley’s attempt to gain some
recognition for the future, or a Bernie Sanders issue-oriented Jesse
Jackson-type candidacy, which will at least give Hillary some practice
expressing her points of view, but will not require any serious expenditure of
energy or money.
With regard to Democrats’ preparations for the other races,
I am heartily in favor of some counterforce development to start winning back
statehouses—it’s early, but 2020 will be here before we know it, and there is a
long, long way to go. Gaining control of
the House seems an impossible dream now, but it could become a possible one if
the Republicans continue on their path toward obsolescence (see the disastrous Religious Freedom law passed in Indiana)—and what is going to
stop them from voluntary self-destruction? Therefore, I am giving (a
small amount) to the DCCC (Democratic Congressional Campaign Committee) each
month, to help them prepare their warchest.
Ben Ray Lujan is the Chairman, he is my Congressman, and I respect his
judgment and his political integrity. I
am not going to repeat my disastrous attempt to cherry-pick Congressional races
to support. With regard to the Senate, I
think it’s looking good, for the most part:
I am very excited by the apparent decision by Russ Feingold to challenge
Ron Johnson to a rematch in Wisconsin, and I disagree with you party pros who
are reluctant to get behind Joe Sestak in Pennsylvania: that seat is a must-win, and he is the best
man for the job, even if he makes you uncomfortable sometimes. Illinois is shaping up as an interesting, also essential, contest: Mark Kirk is vulnerable, but his mix of chosen nuggets of red meat for the right-wing and careful selection of socially responsible positions to avoid turning off the independents will require a strong opponent and turnout to defeat him: Iraq war veteran Tammy Duckworth could be the right kind of Democratic candidate.
I was asked recently by a DNC email to vote for the scariest
Republican presidential candidate. After
voting, I was disappointed not to see any results, I hope they release
some. My vote is for Scott Walker: he is a lamebrained tool who has been propped
up as a new face, but to me (living in a neighboring state) that face is familiar, disgusting and scary. Contrary to what some may say, he is not
popular in Wisconsin (he narrowly defeated two weak opponents), he has not
accomplished anything (except for some right-wing posturing anti-union
measures), his state’s economy is weak, and (as some have recognized) he is
extremely limited in his understanding of national, let alone international,
issues. Since the elections of Ronald
Raygun, Richard Nixon and Dubya, I no longer have any interest in the “the
worse, the better” argument for the Republican nomination process—one should
never assume that any Republican nominee, no matter how unqualified,
hypocritical, or offensive, cannot be elected.
Therefore, it is better to oppose the worst potential Presidents and
mildly favor the better ones.
With regard to other likely Republican candidates, I could be wrong, but I don’t
think I need to waste ammo on the likes of Rick Perry, Ben Carson, Rick
Santorum, George Pataki, Chris Christie, Bobby Jindal, Lindsay Graham, or Marco
Rubio. With regard to this last one, he’s setting himself up for some future
ambition, and will retreat back to Florida to run for re-election when he fails
to win any of the primaries in early 2016.
Ted Cruz is certainly worthy of fervent opposition, if and when it looks
as though he could become the clear favorite of the right-wing nutjobs who make up such a large percentage of the Republican primary voting base; in the
meantime I am mostly amused by the awkward stances of Obama-birthers with
regard to the validity of his qualification to run (mind you, I do not question
it myself).
Who else? –I don’t think we
have to worry about Mike Pence anymore.
John Kasich is a formidable VP candidate but is insufficiently rabid for
Republican primary foodfights. Yes, Jeb
Bush is the most reasonable candidate the Republicans have; my point of view is to let the sharks have at
him for now—he should be weakened, not killed—while I look somewhat anxiously
to see if the possible third-party candidates (which I consider extremely likely
if the major parties offer up Clinton v. Bush) will hurt or help the Democrats’
chances. I am relatively unconcerned by
the possibility of a candidacy for Rand Paul or Mike Huckabee; it’s not that I
agree with the pundits that it is unlikely that either could win the
nomination, it is my feeling that they have some live brain cells and would
govern pragmatically, with a relatively light touch, if they were in fact
elected.
The Real Hard Case
It's easy to share the outrage at the excesses of groups like Boko Haram, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, ISIS, or this week, Al-Shabaab with its massacre of Christian college students in Kenya. I am about as tempted as others to buy into radical violent approaches (I've seen "Bomb Them Even Further into the Stone Age", "Keep Calm and Bomb Everyone"); certainly many of those have forfeited their natural right to continued existence, and those who submit to their domination should be aware that ignominious death in the form of faceless violence (drones, cruise missiles), at the angered hands of offended world opinion, is their most likely destiny.
Rather than offering such short-term prescriptions, though, we should consider what the desired endgame for the peoples of the region should be, and then how can we possibly move toward that kind of outcome. Political role models for the Arabs and the lands of Central and East Africa are few--the options seem to be limited to tyranny, either the secular or fanatical varieties, or chaos (which provides safe haven for the extremists). Turkey and Indonesia provide examples of successful democratic governments in Muslim-dominated electorates, but neither is Arab or African (and Turkey's Erdogan has been veering toward Putinesque maneuvers to retain control in recent years). Algeria and Tunisia have both managed to integrate Islamist forces into existing secular elitist governments, perhaps a model Egypt could move toward, once the restored military power has convinced itself that it has suppressed the Muslim Brotherhood challenge.
The Real Hard Case
It's easy to share the outrage at the excesses of groups like Boko Haram, Al-Qaeda in the Arabian Peninsula, ISIS, or this week, Al-Shabaab with its massacre of Christian college students in Kenya. I am about as tempted as others to buy into radical violent approaches (I've seen "Bomb Them Even Further into the Stone Age", "Keep Calm and Bomb Everyone"); certainly many of those have forfeited their natural right to continued existence, and those who submit to their domination should be aware that ignominious death in the form of faceless violence (drones, cruise missiles), at the angered hands of offended world opinion, is their most likely destiny.
Rather than offering such short-term prescriptions, though, we should consider what the desired endgame for the peoples of the region should be, and then how can we possibly move toward that kind of outcome. Political role models for the Arabs and the lands of Central and East Africa are few--the options seem to be limited to tyranny, either the secular or fanatical varieties, or chaos (which provides safe haven for the extremists). Turkey and Indonesia provide examples of successful democratic governments in Muslim-dominated electorates, but neither is Arab or African (and Turkey's Erdogan has been veering toward Putinesque maneuvers to retain control in recent years). Algeria and Tunisia have both managed to integrate Islamist forces into existing secular elitist governments, perhaps a model Egypt could move toward, once the restored military power has convinced itself that it has suppressed the Muslim Brotherhood challenge.
There is no consistent trend in recent events: Yemen descends toward chaos, Northeast Nigeria (shamed by the success against Boko Haram of neighboring nations' forces) emerges from it. ISIS is in retreat in Syria and Iraq. My own feeling is that there is no stable solution to the problems of those two countries, as currently constituted; they need either to be broken up--something no one dares consider--or some sort of weak federation, with autonomous areas under weakened (and Balkanized) cosmopolitan capitals in Damascus and Baghdad--something like the formula which evolved after decades of disaster in Lebanon and Beirut.